WATERPROOF YESHUA

Keywords: Floating Stillness, Gentle Mastery, Sacred Humor, Divine Support, Resting in Grace.
Waterproof Yeshua sits serene upright in a beautifully woven basket, hands resting open, soft gaze—not commanding miracles but dwelling in their echo. The basket rides gently on the downy back of a great white swan, gliding across glass-like water. The feathers of the swan milky way colored, are like the wings of the Mother.
The number 8 on the card is about Infinite. Through Geometry we have (re)shaped and formed life, but now there seems nothing left to do anymore. For Yeshua as an Infinite Being, contemplates and remembers all the divine magic that came to pass that were oppertunities for Him, to teach. But you only teach the best what you have to learn yourself the most. Now that teaching has ended for Him, He radiates peace in the knowingness that humanity herself is transforming into a swan. From the 'ugly duckling' no longer diving underwater, into the blackness of residues and residuals of a past. They were and are merely places that now shift from opportunities, into experiences. They are being reshaped by the Infinite One, that is your Soul and I Am Presence.
Did He indeed once upon a time walked on water? Was the water shallow? Does it matter? No it does not. It is not about being a magician, it is about divine magic. Turning water into wine may have been so but if true, was just a way of showing alchemist magic of shift shaping. Potentials being shown for the eyes of a public that at that time needed to see it, for otherwise they would not believe. The divine magic of Yeshua is much more than this today. It is no longer demonstrating, nor showing divine power, but the Grace of potentials that come from Love and Wisdom in action.
Upright: This card is an invitation to stop striving for miracles—and instead trust the resilience of being. Mastery is not loud; it glides. The swan represents light itself in motion—not stagnant, not forced, but serene. Yeshua doesn't walk on water here; he floats, carried by a grace he no longer needs to prove. This card whispers: True peace is not in proving your divinity, but resting in its rhythm. You don't have to "make mastery"—you are already held by it.
Reversed: Yeshua speaks to spiritual fatigue or performative holiness. You may be trying to walk on emotional waters that ask only to be floated upon. Perhaps you feel your mastery slipping because it's been sought through control rather than surrender. This card gently calls you home: Lay down the storm. Let yourself be carried. You are still waterproof even when you cry.